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Persuasion or Coercion: Augustine on the State’s Role in Dealing with Other Religions and Heresies
Edward L. Smither, PhD
University of Tunis-el Manar
I. Introduction The religious environment of the Roman Empire changed significantly in AD 321
following Constantine’s alleged conversion to Christianity and declaration that it be the
official religion of the empire.1 This announcement was rather ironic because the
Christian movement, particularly in North Africa, had been suppressed and persecuted by
the Roman authorities at different intervals from 180 to 305. Now having nothing to lose,
many post-321 converts to Christianity were merely aligning themselves with the popular
religion of the state much to the chagrin of church leaders like Augustine of Hippo (354-
430) who lamented the presence of such an insincere element frequenting the church.2
With Christianity as the official religion, Constantine’s declaration also created a
challenge for the state in dealing with other religious groups in the Roman mosaic—
particularly traditional pagans, Jews, and Manicheans. Should they be tolerated or forced
to convert to the new religion of the empire? Sincere Christian leaders, whose task was to
preach the message of Christianity and seek converts, were also posed with a dilemma—
should they seek to persuade non-Christians to join or them should they allow the state to
legislate conversion?
1 François Decret, Le Christianisme en Afrique du Nord Ancienne, (Paris: Seuil, 1996), p. 141; for more on Constantine’s conversion see Alistair Kee, Constantine versus Christ (London: SCM Press, 1982). 2 See Epistula 29.
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In this article, I would like to explore the thought and practical ideology of
Augustine of Hippo in this area. During his tenure as bishop of Hippo, Augustine had
significant contact with Jews, pagans, Manicheans, Donatists, Pelagians, and Arians—
groups that obviously did not conform to orthodox Christianity and that he endeavored to
bring into the Christian church. Did Augustine prefer an approach of persuasion or did he
accept the intervention of the state in forceful conversion?
To answer this question fully, we must first consider how Augustine understood
the state’s role in religious matters. Secondly, we must particularly note Augustine’s
relationship with the Donatists as his interactions with this schismatic group most clearly
revealed his thoughts on coercion and persuasion. Before concluding the argument, we
must also compare his interaction with the Donatists to that of other non-Christian,
schismatic, or heretical groups.
II. Augustine’s View of the State Augustine’s philosophy of history, articulated in his significant work De Civitate Dei
(The City of God), was characterized by two allegiances— an “earthly city” and a
“heavenly” one. The earthly city was concerned with temporary, material, and worldly
matters while the heavenly city was concerned with eternal, spiritual, and heavenly
issues.3 Yet, according to Augustine, both realities were simultaneously present and
interacting in a space-time, earthly context.
Augustine’s political philosophy was also influenced by the notion of the two
cities, as he believed that government and leaders, allowed to govern by the will of God,
existed to serve the church or God’s kingdom on earth. Donald Burt writes:
3 De Civitate Dei, 14.28; 15.4, 16; 17.4.
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Augustine . . . believing that the authorities in the state were agents of God with the responsibility of promoting God’s interests on earth and that those interests included the protection of the religious body that was the interest of his grace and revelation in time.4
While any secular leader should protect the interests of the church, Augustine believed
that Christian emperors could especially be used of God to suppress heretical groups
whose beliefs countered those of orthodox Christianity.5 Peter Brown writes: “Christian
Roman emperors have an unquestioned right of cohercitio [coercion/correction], in the
strict legal sense, to punish, to restrain and repress, those impious cults over which God’s
providence had given them dominion.”6 That is, these servants, according to Augustine
were merely working to fulfill God’s will and the aims of the heavenly city in the context
of the earthly city.7
Hence, within Augustine’s political philosophy it was possible for a professing
Christian emperor such as Constantine to protect both the interests of the church and
suppress those who endangered the church or who refused to become a part of the church.
While these measures were possible for Augustine, let us consider the extent to which
Augustine, in his pastoral ministry in Africa, invoked these privileges when dealing with
heretical and dissident groups.
III. The Donatist Background The Donatists were a schismatic group that Augustine related to quite often during his
time as bishop. As noted, through his practical dealings with them, Augustine’s thoughts
4 Donald Burt, Friendship and Society: An Introduction to Augustine’s Practical Philosophy, (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1999), p. 200. 5 Epistula, 185.26-28. 6 Peter Brown, “Saint Augustine's attitude to religious coercion,” Journal of Roman Studies 54 (1964): 110; see also Augustine’s Contra epistulam Parmeniani, 8.15. 7 Brown, “Saint Augustine's attitude to religious coercion,” 110.
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on the role of the state and church became more developed. Yet, who was this splinter
group that had such a following in Hippo as well as in the Numidian countryside?8
Their origin can be traced to 303 and the end of the Great Persecution of the
church in Africa under the Emperor Diocletian.9 During this period, church leaders were
often required by the Roman authorities to hand over the Holy Scriptures. As a result of
the persecution, division arose between those who remained steadfast and refused to hand
over the Scriptures and those who had surrendered the Scriptures or other books. The
latter group were branded as traditores or apostates by their puritanical opposition.10 The
conflict heightened in 311 when Caecilian was elected bishop of Carthage. Because one
of the bishops who presided over his ordination had been accused of being a traditor, a
group of Numidian bishops gathered and elected Majorinus as the rival bishop of
Carthage. Later, Donatus of Casae Nigrae, whose name became associated with the
group, succeeded Majorinus as the rival bishop of Carthage occupying that role until
347.11 While the Donatists justified their schism over the sake of the church’s purity, the
catholics accused them of being hungry for power. More than being a puritanical
movement within the catholic church, the Donatists began to view themselves as the true
and unblemished church of Africa.12
The division among the African Christians drew the attention of Constantine and
he referred the matter to the bishop of Rome who ruled against the Donatist party at the
8 For the most thorough treatment of the origins of the Donatists, see W.H.C. Frend, The Donatist Church: A Movement of Protest in Roman Africa (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1952), pp. 141-91. 9 W.H.C. Frend, The Rise of Christianity (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1984), p. 489. 10 Frend, The Rise of Christianity, p. 489; see also Robert Markus, “Donatus, Donatism,” in Allan Fitzgerald, ed., Augustine Through The Ages: An Encyclopedia (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1999), 284, hereafter referred to as ATTA. 11 Frend, The Rise of Christianity, pp. 489-90. 12 Markus in ATTA, 285.
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council of Arles in 314.13 In 347, an imperial commission was sent to Africa and once
again ruled against the Donatists. The intervention of the state did little to quell the
movement as it responded to the repression by adopting the stance of a “church of
martyrs.” In the latter half of the fourth-century, a rather violent faction known as the
Circumcellions emerged within the Donatists. In 405, the Emperor Honorius issued an
edict of unity forcing the Donatists to re-unite with the catholic church.14 Finally, at the
council of Carthage of 411, the Donatists were officially condemned by Marcellinus, the
Roman official who presided over the meeting, effectively making it a punishable crime
to be a Donatist.15 Despite the state’s intervention, the Donatists continued to have a
presence in Africa at the time of Augustine’s death in 430.
The doctrine of the catholic church and Donatist movement was almost identical
except for the fact that the Donatists required those who had compromised their faith
during persecution to be re-baptized and that they chose to separate from church leaders
who had handed over Scripture.16 While the Donatists claimed support for their position
from the teachings of the martyred bishop, Cyprian of Carthage (195-258), Augustine and
the catholics also looked to Cyprian for his teaching on preserving the unity of the church
against schism.17 Though it would be easy to characterize the Donatists as a repressed
religious movement, we should note that it was the Donatists who initially invited the
13 Epistula, 88. 14 For a thorough summary of the edict of 405 see Emilien Lamirande, Church, State, and Toleration: An Intriguing Change of Mind in Augustine (Villanova: Villanova University Press, 1975), pp. 9-12. 15 Markus in ATTA, 285; see also Burt, p. 215. 16 James J. O’Donnell, Augustine: A New Biography (New York: Harper Collins, 2005), p. 14. 17 Epistula, 93.10.40-42; Contra Epistulam Parmeniani, 3; see Maureen Tilley, “Epistulam Parmeniani, Contra,” in ATTA, 312.
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Roman authorities to intervene on their behalf during the early stages of the schism. Yet,
when the state ruled against them, they adopted this posture of a church of martyrs.18
IV. Augustine and the Donatists At the time of Augustine’s consecration as bishop in 395, the Donatists outnumbered the
catholics in Hippo and had a significant following in the rural areas of the Numidian
province. Indeed, Augustine’s desire to keep the church from being torn apart by schism
as well as his passion to see the Donatists converted to the catholic church moved him to
focus much attention and energy on the Donatist movement for the majority of his career
as bishop. In light of the history of the movement, which included the consistent
intervention of the state, let us consider Augustine’s approach to dealing with the
Donatists. To understand the development in Augustine’s thought, we will analyze
Augustine his interaction with the Donatists in three periods: from the time of his
consecration as a priest 391 to Honorius’ edict of unity in 405; from 405 to the
conference of Carthage of 411; and then after 411.
1. 391-405 William Frend writes that in the first ten years of Augustine’s tenure as bishop “he spent
all his energies as a writer and a diplomat in combating [the Donatists], his object being
first to defeat their leaders in argument and then, as a result of a general conference, to
persuade the mass of the Donatist church to reunite with the catholics.”19 Emilien
Lamirande adds at that in this period “he emphasized mere pacific means of persuasion:
personal contacts, writings, public discussions. Before 400, he is apparently an advocate
18 Epistula 185.2.6; Burt, p. 208; Lamirande, pp. 49-50; see also Jane Merdinger, Rome and the African Church (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997), p. 104. 19 Frend, The Donatist Church, p. 228.
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of religious freedom.”20 Indeed, prior to 405, Augustine related to the Donatists leaders
and laity through a number of letters, books, and personal visits for the purpose of debate.
Also, he played a significant role in some African church councils of catholic bishops in
which the Donatist schism was the main issue.
(1) Letters While making significant use of letters for teaching, exhorting, and correcting in
his pastoral ministry, he also used this form in relating to the Donatist leaders. Between
392 and 405, he wrote twelve letters to Donatist leaders, groups of leaders, or Donatist
laymen. Augustine’s first letter to a Donatist bishop, Epistula 23 to Maximinus, was
penned around 392 when he was still a priest in the church at Hippo. While investigating
allegations that Maximinus had re-baptized some catholics entering the Donatist
communion, Augustine rebuked him for such practices and took time to teach about the
true nature of the church.21
Prior to 396, Augustine in Epistula 33 invited Proculeianus, the Donatist bishop
of Hippo, to debate the issues related to the schism face-to-face or at least by letter.22 In
396-397, Augustine wrote two letters to Eusebius (Epistulae 34 and 35) over concerns of
the practice of re-baptism and appealed to Eusebius to help arrange a debate with
Proculeianus. In Epistula 34, Augustine clearly communicates that he is against coercion
as a means of converting the Donatists. He writes: “this feeling of mine is one tending
towards peace, and that my desire is, not that any one should against his will be coerced
20 Lamirande, p. 12. 21 Epistula, 23.2-4. 22 Epistula, 33.4.
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into the catholic communion, but that to all who are in error the truth may be openly
declared . . .”23
In 396-397, Augustine wrote two letters (Epistulae 43 and 44) to a group of
Donatist bishops in the region of Thuburiscum in Numidia. In Epistula 43, Augustine
rather persuasively challenges these leaders to consider the origins of the schism while
also attacking the inconsistencies in the Donatist policy of re-baptism. Epistula 44 was
essentially the notes of his debate with Fortunius of Thuburiscum in 395— one of the
many examples in which Augustine documented his debates or conferences with
theological opponents.24 Though his debate with Fortunius was a chaotic affair,
Augustine emphasized a desire to continue to dialogue with the Donatist leaders while
disregarding the state’s intervention against the Donatists.25
Around 398, Augustine wrote Epistula 49 to the bishop Honoratus. Augustine
challenges the notion of a separate African church while teaching on the nature of a
catholic church; that is, a universal church existing among all nations. He also invited
Honoratus to debate via letter on these issues.26 In Epistula 52, he writes to Severinus, a
Donatist leader who was also his own cousin. Again, Augustine attacks the division of
the church and re-baptism and pleads with Severinus to return to the catholic church.
Augustine penned two letters (Epistulae 51 and 66) to Crispinus, the Donatist
bishop of Calama. In Epistula 51, written around 399, Augustine invited him to debate
the issues at least by letter.27 He goes on to argue against the logical inconsistencies of
23 Epistula, 34.1, 24 Othmar Perler, Les Voyages de Saint Augustin, (Paris: Etudes Augustiniennes, 1969), pp. 436-37. 25 Epistula, 44.11-14. 26 Epistula, 49.2-3. 27 Epistula, 51.1.
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the Donatist position and chastises him for dividing the body of Christ through schism.28
Augustine hints for the first time that if things did not change, he might be willing to
accept the state’s intervention.29 Prior to 401, Augustine wrote Epistula 66 after
Crispinus had forcefully re-baptized eighty rural farmers in Calama. Despite, Crispinus’
aggressive action, Augustine invited him to debate the issues in a personal meeting.30
Urging that people should be able to make their own decision about being Donatist or
catholic, he writes: “let them hear both sides, and choose for themselves.”31 Augustine
warns Crispinus that if he does not cease with dividing the church, he would face the
wrath of God, which may be an indication that Augustine was becoming open to the
possibility of the state’s intervention.32
Around 404, writing on behalf of the catholic church, Augustine penned Epistula
76 to the Donatists as a whole. Again, recounting the origin and history of the schism,
Augustine goes on to relate his own understanding of the church. That is, the Lord would
separate the wheat from the tares (the good and bad elements of the church) on the last
day. Hence, it was not the job of the clergy to judge the hearts of men and bring division
to the church.33 Finally, Augustine reiterated his invitation for the Donatist leaders to join
him in debate.34
Augustine’s final letter to the Donatists prior to Honorius’ edict of unity in 405
was Epistula 87 to Emeritus of Mauretania Caesarea. Augustine opens the letter by
acknowledging his zeal to see the stubborn and resistant Emeritus converted to the true
28 Epistula, 51.2-5. 29 Epistula, 51.3. 30 Epistula, 66.2; Burt, p. 214. 31 Epistula, 66.2. 32 Epistula, 66.2. 33 Epistula, 76.2. 34 Epistula, 76.4.
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church.35 Augustine accuses him of bringing division to the church,36 of denying the
existence of the church outside of Africa,37 and warns him of God’s judgment to come.38
In this letter, he argues that the state has the right to punish a group like the Donatists
because they are a disruption to society: “For they bear not the sword in vain; they are the
ministers of God to execute wrath upon those that do evil.”39 Finally, through making
reference to the origins of the Donatist schism, Augustine hoped that Emeritus would
recognize his erroneous thinking and be converted to the church.40
(2) Books Between 393 and 405, Augustine authored six surviving works of a polemical nature
against the Donatists. While serving as a priest in the church of Hippo in 393, he wrote
Psalmus contra partem Donati, which was composed in the form of a song in order to
connect with the uneducated rural population. Actually, Augustine had adopted this tactic
from the Donatists who had used songs to propagate their message. In the book,
Augustine appealed to the Donatists to cease being divisive and to return to the mother
church.41
In 400, Augustine authored Contra epistulam Parmeniani, a reply to an old letter
written by Parmenian, who had been the Donatist bishop of Carthage from 361-392. In
his work, Augustine referred to the unwarranted origin of the schism while attacking the
Donatists’ inconsistent policy of re-baptism. Specifically, Augustine showed cases in
which fallen Donatists were not required to be re-baptized when returning to the Donatist
35 Epistula, 87.1. 36 Epistula, 87.1. 37 Epistula, 87.5. 38 Epistula, 87.4. 39 Epistula, 87.8. 40 Epistula, 87.10. 41 Maureen Tilley, “Psalmus contra partem Donati,” ATTA, 688
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communion. Finally, Augustine strengthened his argument by citing the Donatist
theologian Tyconius who believed in a universal church and Cyprian of Carthage who
affirmed the unity of the church.42 Later, in 400 or 401, Augustine followed up Contra
epistulam Parmeniani with De Baptismo providing more teaching on the sacrament of
baptism. Most notably, Augustine argued that the efficacy of baptism did not depend on
the holiness of the baptizing priest as the Donatists had argued.43
In 401, Augustine addressed Contra litteras Petiliani to Petilian, the Donatist
bishop of Cirta in which he challenges the legitimacy of the Donatist movement by again
referring to the origins of the schism.44 Between 402 and 405, Augustine responded to a
certain Donatist pamphlet with Ad Catholicos fratres, a treatise on the nature of the true
church— one that is spread out over the whole world and not limited to Africa.45 Finally
around 405, Augustine wrote Contra Cresconium and again attacked the origins of the
Donatist schism.46
(3) Personal Visits and Debates Despite the fact that Augustine despised traveling and that a journey on the North African
roads could be dangerous, the bishop of Hippo also sought to convert the Donatists by
personally visiting their leaders and holding public debates. In 395, Augustine made the
two-day journey to Thuburiscu Numidarum to debate the Donatist bishop Fortunius. Yet,
according to Augustine, neither the bishop nor the gathered crowd seemed interested in a
serious exchange of idea.47 Later that year, Augustine pursued more discussions with
42 Maureen Tilley, “Epistulam Parmeniani, Contra,” ATTA, 312. 43 Maureen Tilley, “Baptismo, De,” ATTA, 91-92. 44 Maureen Tilley, “Litteras Petiliani, Contra,”ATTA, 504-505. 45 Maureen Tilley, “Catholicos fratres, Ad: or De unitate ecclesiae,”ATTA, 150-151. 46 Maureen Tilley, “Cresconium, Contra,” ATTA, 255-56. 47 Epistula, 44; Perler, pp. 436-437.
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Donatist leaders in Thiava.48 Following his request in Epistula 51, he also managed to
successfully debate Crispinus of Calama in 399.49
From Augustine’s letters, we also know that he initiated debates with
Proculeianus of Hippo (Epistulae 33-35) and Severinus (Epistula 52).50 Yet, after a short
period, the Donatists began to refuse any form of public debate with Augustine because
of his superior communication skills. Being aware of their reluctance to debate yet still
desiring to engage the Donatists, Augustine wrote to Eusebius: “as it affects Proculeianus
and myself; and if, perchance, he thinks himself not a match for me, let him implore the
aid of any one whom he pleases as his colleague in the debate.”51
(4) Church Councils From 393 to 427, Augustine participated regularly in the catholic councils of the African
church and his voice was undoubtedly the most influential among the bishops. The
councils generally addressed issues of church practice, discipline, as well as heretical
influences on the church. Prior to 405, Augustine and the African bishops discussed the
Donatist issue during three church councils.
Following the council of Carthage of 401, the bishops decided to launch a
missionary effort toward the Donatists in the rural areas and Augustine himself traveled
in order to fulfill the will of this council.52 During the council of Carthage of 403,
Augustine drafted a document on behalf of the bishops inviting the Donatists in each
town to come to a public debate to resolve the schism.53 At the same time, the bishops
48 Epistula, 43.2; Perler, pp. 210-211, 436-437. 49 Perler, pp. 442-443. 50 Frend, The Donatist Church, p. 249. 51 Epistula, 34.5. 52 Contra Cresconium, 3.60, 66; Frend, The Donatist Church, p. 252. 53 Charles Hefele, Histoire des Conciles (Paris: Letouzey et Ané, 1908), 2.1.155
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communicated to the Roman authorities their conviction that “the heretics of the
community of Donatus should be admonished in a ‘kindly manner,’ so that they could
meditate upon their error, and not neglect to recognize it.”54 As the initiatives of the
council of 403 were unsuccessful, the majority of bishops meeting in Carthage in 404
were prepared to appeal to the state to force the Donatists into unity with the catholic
church. Yet, Augustine and a small group of bishops prevailed upon their colleagues to
ask simply for the state’s protection against the violent elements of the Donatists.55
Hence, when the Emperor Honorius issued the edict of unity in 405, it was not at
the request of Augustine nor the African bishops. Rather, it was a sudden reaction by
Honorius to the visit and personal appeal of Maximianus of Bagai, a catholic bishop who
had been violently beaten by the Donatists inside his church.
(5) Summary Prior to 405, Augustine actively endeavored to convert the Donatists to the catholic
church. His letters were quite kind and respectful in their tone and generally included an
invitation to meet personally. The main themes of both his letters and books in this period
included: teaching on the true nature of the church, teaching on the proper theology and
practice of baptism, a consideration of the origins of the Donatist-catholic schism, and an
appeal for the Donatists to return to the true church.
Augustine’s invitation by letter for a personal meeting was realized on several
occasions during this period as he traveled to visit and debate a number of Donatist
leaders. His influence in the African church councils also encouraged the African bishops
to approach their Donatist counterparts in a friendly and persuasive manner. Augustine’s
54 Cited in Frend, The Donatist Church, pp. 258-259. 55 Epistulae, 93.5, 17; 185.7; Perler, p. 251; Hefele, 2.1.156; Frend, The Donatist Church, p. 262.
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only request of the state prior to 405 was that the catholic church be protected against the
more violent elements of the Donatist party.
Though some of Augustine’s letters allude to a possible acceptance of state
intervention against the Donatists, his preference at this time was to see them converted
through persuasion. While writing his Retractactiones toward the end of his life,
Augustine wrote: “And truly, at that time, such coercion displeased me because I had not
yet learned either how much evil their impunity would dare or to what extent the
application of discipline could bring about their improvement.”56
2. 405-411 Though Augustine had urged the African bishops not to appeal to the state to intervene
against the Donatists in 404, he did accept Honorius’ edict of unity in 405 and
respectfully worked to carry it out. Lamirande writes: “[Augustine] accepts together with
the majority of the catholic bishops of North Africa the actual application of defensive
measures against the Donatists and soon after, the direct use of force to compel them
back to the unity of the church.”57 As we consider Augustine’s development during this
period, let us again analyze his thought in letters and books directed to the Donatists as
well as his contact with Donatist leaders through personal visits and his involvement in
the African church councils which culminated in the council of Carthage of 411.
(1) Letters From 405 to 411, Augustine continued to interact with the Donatists via correspondence
by sending five letters. Around 406, Augustine sent Epistula 88 to Januarius, a senior
ranking Donatist bishop. While not denying the state’s intervention on behalf of the
56 Retractactiones, 2.31.5 cited in Lamirande, p. 18. 57 Lamirande, p. 12.
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catholics following Honorius’ edict, Augustine reminds Januarius that it was the
Donatists who first asked for the state’s help during the initial stages of the schism under
Constantine.58 Hence, once again, he reminds Januarius of the origins of the schism.
While complaining about the ongoing violent tendencies of the Circumcellions,59
Augustine argues that it was such violence that forced the catholics to seek the help of the
Roman authorities:
You have therefore no ground for complaint against us: nay more, the clemency of the catholic church would have led us to desist from even enforcing these decrees of the emperors, had not your clergy and Circumcellions, disturbing our peace, and destroying us by their most monstrous crimes and furious deeds of violence, compelled us to have these decrees revived and put in force again.60
Augustine adds that the state’s intervention had been the last resort after repeated, futile
efforts to bring the Donatists together for a conference.61 Yet, he continues to plead with
Januarius to meet personally and resolve their issues before the secular authorities
became more involved.62 Even after accepting the state’s role in dealing with the
Donatists, Augustine still seems to favor persuasion as his preferred method of inviting
the Donatists to reunite with the church. He writes:
And thus some of them we persuade, through their considering the evidences of the truth and the beauty of peace, not to be baptized anew for this sign of allegiance to our king they have already received . . . but to accept that faith, and love of the Holy Spirit, and union to the Body of Christ . . .’63
The development of Augustine’s thought on state intervention was most clearly
expressed in Epistula 93 written in 407 or 408 to Vincent. He began by reiterating that
the Donatists’ violent nature was the compelling factor that led the catholics to seek the
58 Epistula, 88.5. 59 Epistula, 88.1-2. 60 Epistula, 88.6. 61 Epistula, 88.7. 62 Epistula, 88.10, 12. 63 Epistula, 88.9.
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help of the state.64 Yet, Augustine admitted that, stemming from the influence of his
fellow bishops, he began to regard coercion as an effective means of converting the
Donatists to the unity of the church. He writes: “my first opinion was that no one was to
be forced into the unity of Chirst . . . I have, then, yielded to the facts suggested to me by
my colleagues . . . This opinion of mine has been set aside, not because of opposing
arguments, but by reason of proved facts.”65 He adds:
. . . the repression and correction of [the Donatists] . . . by the powers which are ordained of God, appears to me to be labor not in vain. For we already rejoice in the correction of many who hold and defend the catholic unity with such sincerity, and are so glad to have been delivered from their former error . . .66
He continues the letter by arguing that the state’s intervention and coercion is a form of
healing and loving correction and that the Donatists were forced to do something that was
actually good for them.67 He writes:
You now see therefore, I suppose, that the thing to be considered when any one is coerced, is not the mere fact of the coercion, but the nature of that to which he is coerced, whether it be good or bad: not that any one can be good in spite of his own will, but that, through fear of suffering what he does not desire, he either renounces his hostile prejudices, or is compelled to examine truth of which he had been contentedly ignorant; and under the influence of this fear repudiates the error which he was wont to defend . . . We see not a few men here and there, but many cities, once Donatist, now catholic, vehemently detesting the diabolical schism, and ardently loving the unity of the church . . .68
Augustine further expresses his conviction that government, the agents of coercion in this
case, existed to serve the church. He writes: “. . . let the kings of the earth serve Christ by
making laws for Him and for His cause.”69
64 Epistula, 93.1.2. 65 Epistula, 93.5.17 cited in Lamirande, p. 14; see also Lamirande, pp. 7, 15. 66 Epistula, 93.1.1. 67 Epistula, 93.1.3; 2.4-8. 68 Epistula, 93.5.16. 69 Epistula, 93.5.19.
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After defending the state’s intervention, Augustine takes time to teach on the true
nature of the universal church, which he supports from the teaching of Cyprian and
Tyconius.70 Yet, Augustine warns Vincent about overemphasizing the teachings of a
figure like Cyprian and urges him to find answers in the Holy Scriptures.71 Finally,
Augustine expresses the heart of a pastor longing to see Vincent and his fellow Donatists
converted to the church:
We seek you because you are lost, that we may rejoice over you when found, as over you while lost we grieved. Again we call you heretics; but the name applies to you only up to the time of your being turned to the peace of the catholic church, and extricated from the errors by which you have been ensnared.72
Around 408, Augustine addressed Epistula 105 to the Donatists in general. He
opens the letter by admitting his evangelistic motive for writing: ‘We the love of Christ,
to which we want to win all men, does not permit us to be silent.’73 Augustine continues
to remind the Donatists of the origin of the schism while challenging them on cases of
violence.74 He repeats the conviction that an earthly king can carry out God’s will on
earth and concludes by inviting the Donatist bishops to a conference.75
In 409 and 410, Augustine wrote two letters (Epistulae 106 and 108) to the
Donatist bishop Macrobius. In Epistula 106, he rebukes Macrobius for re-baptizing one
of Augustine’s sub-deacons. In Epistula 108, Augustine continues by challenging the
theology and practice of re-baptism by making an argument against it from the
70 Epistula, 93.6.21; 7.22-23; 9.28-34; 10.40-45. 71 Epistula, 93.10.35-39. 72 Epistula, 93.11.46; see also 93.13.51. 73 Epistula, 105.1. 74 Epistula, 105.2, 4. 75 Epistula, 105.7, 11, 13.
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Scriptures,76 by showing how Cyprian refused to allow the church to be divided,77 and
through exposing inconsistent practices of baptism among the Donatists themselves.78
(2) Books and Visits Augustine only wrote one book to the Donatists during this period— De unico baptismo
contra Petilianum, which he penned in 410 or 411. In a response to another pamphlet by
the Donatist bishop Petilian, Augustine argued against the need for re-baptism and
against dividing the church. As in other letters and books, he also appealed to the
teachings of Cyprian on the unity of the church.79
Augustine only made one recorded visit to the Donatists between 405 and 411.
Interestingly, he traveled to Cirta in 409 to visit the Donatist bishop, church leaders, and
their congregation who had announced their desire to return to the catholic church.
Hence, the purpose of this visit was not to persuade or convert but to welcome this group
into the church.80
(3) Council of Carthage of 411 Following the council of catholic bishops in June of 410, Augustine and the African
bishops were granted their request by the Emperor Honorius for a mandatory face-to-face
conference with the Donatists.81 Having continually invited the Donatists to meet
personally since becoming bishop in 395, Augustine’s desire was fulfilled in the council
of Carthage of 411.
76 Epistula, 108.8. 77 Epistula, 108.9-12. 78 Epistula, 108.2-7. 79 Maureen Tilley,“Unico baptismo contra Petilianum, De,’ ATTA, 858-859. 80 Epistula, 144; Perler, pp. 452-453. 81 Perler, p. 277-278.
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From the outset of the 411 meeting, it was evident that the Donatist party would
be defeated.82 Though the gathering was called a conference, the presiding Roman
official Marcellinus, a catholic layman and friend of Augustine, announced that the
purpose of the council was “to confirm the catholic faith.”83 While the catholics surely
had the advantage, the Donatist leaders proved to be quite defiant. Though Marcellinus
had prescribed that each side would be represented by seven of its leaders, the entire
Donatist delegation marched into the meeting place for the opening session.84 As well,
the Donatist bishop Petilian demanded a roll call for each catholic and Donatist bishop
claiming that the catholics had created bishops that did not exist.85 After the second day
of meeting, the Donatists petitioned for a recess to verify the records of the roll call.
Further, Petilian attempted to slander Augustine by referring to him as a Manichean.
Augustine refused to fall into Petilian’s trap of personal accusation and graciously
encouraged the Donatists to take their time and verify the record as well as to think about
their arguments.86 When the meeting re-convened five days later, Augustine’s prowess as
an apologist and rhetor were put on display as he masterfully defeated the Donatist
leaders in debate by continually focusing on the core issue— the origins of the schism.87
This, of course, had been his strategy in letters and books prior to the council of 411.
Though Marcellinus had clearly favored the catholics in the conference,
Augustine’s keen theological and rhetorical abilities only strengthened the verdict against
82 For a thorough treatment of the council of 411, see Frend, The Donatist Church, pp. 275-289; see also Serge Lancel, ed., Actes de la Conférence de Carthage en 411, 3 vol. (Paris: Éditions du Cerf, 1972, 1975). 83 Frend, The Donatist Church, pp. 275, 280. 84 The conference met on June 1, 3, and 8; see Peter Brown, Augustine of Hippo: a Biography (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967, 2000), pp. 332-333. 85 In the end the catholic bishops (both present and absent) numbered 286 while the Donatists numbered 284; see Brown, Augustine of Hippo, pp. 332-333 and Frend, The Donatist Church, p. 277. 86 Frend, The Donatist Church, p. 286; Brown, Augustine of Hippo, p. 334. 87 Frend, The Donatist Church, p. 286; and Perler, p. 291.
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the Donatists. As a result, the Donatists were ordered to give up their church buildings
and to unify with the catholic church.
(4) Summary From the announcement of Honorius’ edict of unity in 405 to the council of Carthage in
411 in which the Donatists were officially condemned, Augustine had fully accepted the
intervention of the Roman authorities forcing the Donatists to unify with the catholic
church. In his letters from this period, he clearly explains the development in his thought
on the role of the secular authorities. Nevertheless, through his letters, book, and
arguments at the 411 conference, he continued to show the errors of the origins of the
schism, argued against re-baptism and church division, and taught on the true nature of
the church. That is, even at this stage, he still seems to value persuasion as a means of
converting the Donatists.
3. Post-411 James J. O’Donnell asserts that despite the fact that the ruling at the council of Carthage
in 411 was Augustine’s greatest personal triumph, he never takes time to articulate his
feelings about the catholic victory.88 One explanation is that by 415, Augustine became
quite involved in addressing the Pelagian controversy that was challenging the church.
Secondly, we should remember that Augustine was a pastor seeking to persuade a
dissident group to join the church. Hence, he had no motivation to gloat over the
Donatists as if they were conquered enemies on a battlefield. Yet Augustine did continue
to have contact with the Donatists after the council of Carthage. From 411 to 418, he
continues to interact with them through letters, books, and at least one personal visit.
88 O’Donnell, p. 15.
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(1) Letters During the period following the conference, Augustine wrote two letters to the Donatists.
Around 412, Augustine penned Epistula 141 on behalf of the North African bishops in
response to some Donatist allegations that the catholics emerged victorious because
Marcellinus had been bribed. Augustine answered succinctly by recounting each stage of
the council, particularly those points where the Donatists admitted being at fault in the
schism.
Between 411 and 414, Augustine wrote Epistula 173 to a Donatist priest named
Donatus who had apparently resisted the closure of his church building and attempted to
harm himself in the process.89 Augustine defends the state’s intervention by first arguing
that coercion must be motivated by love. He writes:
If you could see the sorrow of my heart and my concern for your salvation, you would perhaps take pity on your own soul, doing that which is pleasing to God, by giving heed to the word which is not ours but His; and would no longer give to His Scripture only a place in your memory, while shutting it out from your heart. You are angry because you are being drawn to salvation, although you have drawn so many of our fellow Christians to destruction. For what did we order beyond this, that you should be arrested, brought before the authorities, and guarded, in order to prevent you from perishing?90
Secondly, Augustine adds that the purpose of coercion is not merely restraining from
evil, but also compelling one to do what is good.91 Finally, despite acknowledging and
defending the state’s role in suppressing the Donatists, Augustine takes time in the letter
to remind Donatus of the debate that took place at the council of 411— essentially
appealing to his Donatist counterpart through reason and persuasion. He writes:
For this end the mercy of the Lord appointed that both we and your bishops met at Carthage in a conference which had repeated meetings, and was largely attended, and reasoned together in the most orderly manner in regard to the grounds of our
89 Epistula, 173.4. 90 Epistula, 173.1. 91 Epistula, 173.2-4.
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separation from each other. The proceedings of that conference were written down; our signatures are attached to the record: read it, or allow others to read it to you, and then choose which party you prefer.92
(2) Books Following the 411 council, Augustine continued to write instructive and persuasive books
to the Donatists. After receiving the acts of the council from Marcellinus, Augustine had
them posted inside the churches in the provincial capitals of North Africa.93 He also
wrote the Breviculus conlationis cum Donatistis— a simplified account of the conference
written in accessible language for those with limited education.
Also in 411, Augustine wrote Contra Donatistis post conlationem, a work
intended for the Donatist laity in which Augustine shows how the Donatist bishops
misinterpreted the Scriptures during the 411 council. As in previous works, he appeals to
Cyprian’s teaching on unity and urges the Donatists to be unified with the catholic
church.94
In 419, Augustine authored his final anti-Donatist work, Contra Gaudentium. He
was actually writing on behalf of the Roman official Dulcitus who, while attempting to
carry out the anti-Donatist legislation in Numidia, was challenged by a Donatist leader
named Gaudentius. In his work, Augustine refuted Gaudentius’ claim that the Donatists
were the persecuted group, challenged his interpretation of the Scriptures, as well as his
interpretation of Cyprian.95
(3) Visit to Emeritus One of Augustine’s key tasks after the 411 conference was helping the Donatists
integrate into the catholic church by educating them from the acts of the council as well
92 Epistula, 173.7; see also 173.9. 93 Epistula, 139.1; 28*.2; Frend, The Donatist Church, p. 290. 94 Maureen Tilley, “Donatistis post conlationem, Contra,” ATTA, 281. 95 Maureen Tilley, “Gaudentium, Contra,” ATTA 375-376.
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as from the Scriptures. We know that on at least two occasions, Augustine preached to
the former Donatist congregations in Hippo and Cirta.96
Augustine’s most famous visit at this stage came following the council of
Carthage of 418 in which he made the fifteen day journey (1100 km) to Mauretania
Caesarea to meet the Donatist bishop Emeritus who was still refusing to unite with the
catholic church.97 Emeritus already had a reputation for being stubborn as was observed
in his role as a Donatist spokesperson at the 411 conference and through his prior
correspondence with Augustine.98 During the visit, Augustine preached the sermon,
Sermo ad Caesariensis ecclesiae plebem, to Emeritus’ congregation affirming them in
their sincere faith while urging them to join the unity of the church.99 In a separate
meeting, Augustine publicly debated Emeritus appealing to him as a brother as well as
arguing against the inconsistent re-baptism practices of the Donatists. The debate was
recorded by copyists and has been preserved under the title Gesta cum Emerito.100 It
should be noted that Emeritus refused to be converted and probably remained a Donatist
for the rest of his life.
The most significant aspect about this encounter is that seven years after
Donatism was branded a criminal offense by the state, Augustine continues to appeal to
Emeritus and his Donatist congregation through persuasion. Instead of making the long
voyage to Mauretania Caesarea with an armed regiment of government soldiers to
enforce legislation, Augustine simply arrives with the same arguments and appeals that
had characterized his letters, books, and conferences for the previous twenty years.
96 Epistulae, 139.2; 144; Frend, The Donatist Church, pp. 290-291; and Perler, pp. 306-307. 97 Perler, pp. 466-467. 98 Epistula, 88. 99 Maureen Tilley, “Sermo ad Caesariensis ecclesiae plebem,” ATTA, 770-771. 100 Maureen Tilley, “Gesta cum Emerito,” ATTA, 381-382.
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4. Summary Indeed, Augustine invested a great deal of time and energy in writing letters and books,
making personal visits, and influencing church councils for the purpose of persuading the
Donatists to convert to catholic unity in each of the three periods we have considered.
While a conclusion on the larger question of whether Augustine preferred persuasion or
coercion as a means toward conversion will be proposed later in this paper, the fact
remains that Augustine did accept and defend the intervention of the state in the case of
the Donatists. How did Augustine arrive at this change of mind on the issue?
(1) Resistance to Debate The first reason why Augustine accepted the interference of the secular authorities around
405 was that the Donatists refused to meet and seriously debate the issues. Most of
Augustine’s letters to the Donatists, both before and after 405, included the perpetual
invitation to meet and talk. Yet, leaders like Proculeianus, aware of Augustine’s superior
skills in debate, avoided this forum at all costs.101 Others, like Fortunius as well as the
Donatist leaders at the council of 411 seemingly sought to sabotage the meeting once a
debate was actually organized.
As noted, Augustine, writing in his Retractactiones near the end of his life,
indicated that prior to 405, he was purely interested in reaching the Donatists through
reason.102 Yet, as Lamirande has asserted, “dialectics does not always ensure victory.”103
Reflecting on his transformation of thought in a letter to the Roman official Boniface
around 417, Augustine wrote:
It is indeed better (as no one ever could deny) that men should be led to worship God by teaching, than that they should be driven to it by fear of punishment or
101 Frend, The Donatist Church, p. 234. 102 Retractactiones, 2.31.5; Frend, The Donatist Church, p. 240. 103 Lamirande, p. 23.
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pain; but it does not follow that because the former course produces the better men, therefore those who do not yield to it should be neglected.104
Hence, as a last resort and due to the Donatists continual unwillingness to meet and
debate the issues related to their schism, Augustine accepted the intervention of the
Roman authorities.
(2) A Threat to Unity A second significant reason for Augustine’s acceptance of the state’s involvement was
that the Donatist movement posed a serious threat to the unity of the church— a doctrine
and that he deeply cherished. As noted, Augustine had been influenced by Cyprian’s
teaching on the church’s unity and fought as fervently as Cyprian had to preserve it. As
we will see, Augustine defended the church against other heretical groups that existed in
his day, yet none of these groups had the ability to divide the church as the Donatists
did.105 Hence, when Augustine allowed the state to intervene against the Donatists, he
was acting in the interest of a shepherd seeking to protect his flock.
The Donatists were also different from other heretical groups because Augustine
actually regarded them as brothers in the Christian faith who had gone astray.106 In this
sense, coercive measures against the Donatists were simply a means of church discipline.
Augustine elaborated on this in Epistula 185 to Boniface:
Why, therefore, should not the church use force in compelling her lost sons to return, if the lost sons compelled others to their destruction? Although even men who have not been compelled, but only led astray, are received by their loving mother with more affection if they are recalled to her bosom through the enforcement of terrible but salutary laws, and are the objects of far more deep congratulation than those whom she had never lost. Is it not a part of the care of the shepherd, when any sheep have left the flock, even though not violently
104 Epistula, 185.6.21. 105 Burt, pp. 220-221. 106 Epistula, 129.3; Enarrationes in Psalmos, 46.1; Contra epistulam Parmeniani, 3.1.1; De Baptismo, 1.1.2; Lamirande, p. 33.
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forced away, but led astray by tender words and coaxing blandishments, to bring them back to the fold of his master when he has found them, by the fear or even the pain of the whip, if they show symptoms of resistance . . .107
In keeping with Augustine’s philosophy of government, a Christian emperor ought to be
able to serve the church by helping it with its disciplinary matters.
(3) Violence A third important reason that Augustine came to defend the state’s intervention was that
the Donatists, particularly the Circumcellion faction, were growing increasingly violent.
In this respect, the Donatist-catholic schism was not some classroom theological debate;
rather, some of Augustine’s close friends and colleagues were being terrorized by the
Circumcellions. The catholic missionary effort toward the Donatists in the Numidian
countryside following the council of 401 had been met by violence.108 In 404,
Augustine’s disciple and biographer Possidius was beaten by the Circumcellions in
Calama and barely escaped with his life.109 In 411, the Roman official Marcellinus ruled
against a group of Donatists in Hippo for acts of violence and Augustine actually
intervened on their behalf to keep them from receiving the death penalty.110 During a trip,
Augustine himself was spared from being attacked by a band of Circumcellions because
of an accidental wrong turn in the road.
In this sense, the Donatists were not being suppressed for their theological
leanings but simply because they were a threat to an ordered society. Augustine believed
that the government was entitled to intervene to protect the innocent as well as the state
itself. Ironically, the Circumcellions had also been violent toward traditional Roman
107 Epistula, 185.6.23. 108 Frend, The Donatist Church, pp. 257-258. 109 Contra Cresconium, 3.46.50; Frend, The Donatist Church, pp. 260. 110 Epistula, 133.1; 139.2.
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pagans— a group that was also known for its violent tendencies.111 In his letter to
Boniface, Augustine related his belief that suppressing the Donatists would quell their
violence and allow the catholics to worship in peace:
Our idea was that if they were frightened in this manner, and so did not dare to commit such acts, there would be freedom for the catholic truth to be taught and embraced, so that no one would be forced to it, but any who wished might follow it without fear, and thus we should not have any false or feigned catholics.112
(4) Coercion was Effective As the Donatists refused to reason with Augustine and the catholics and while violence
continued, Augustine began to accept coercion as an alternative for very practical
reasons— it seemed to work with the Donatists.113 As Augustine communicated to
Vincent in Epistula 93, it was Augustine’s fellow bishops that in part convinced him “by
reason of proved facts” that state intervention was a necessary option with the
Donatists.114 In his letter to Boniface, Augustine adds: “For many have found advantage .
. . in being first compelled by fear or pain, so that they might afterwards be influenced by
teaching and follow by action what they had learned through words.”115 While Augustine
would have preferred simply reasoning with the Donatists, he became convinced that
because of their stubbornness, they first needed to be compelled to listen.
(5) Coercion is Love While Augustine came to believe that coercion was effective on a practical level, his
philosophical views also seemed to change through the course of his interactions with the
Donatists. That is, he realized that not every form of persecution was wrong, especially if
111 Burt, pp. 212, 217, 220. 112 Epistula, 185.25 cited in Lamirande, p. 16. 113 Burt, p. 213; Lamirande, p. 18. 114 Epistula, 93.5.17 cited in Lamirande, p. 14. 115 Epistula, 185.6.21 cited in Burt, p. 217.
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it had rehabilitation as its purpose.116 Citing the account in the Gospels in which Jesus
forcefully cleared out the moneychangers from the temple; Augustine likened the work of
coercion to a physician administering medicine or painful treatment so that the patient
would be healed.117 Peter Brown makes the interesting assertion that the Latin cohertio,
from which we derive our word “coercion,” may better be translated as “correction.” That
is, Augustine’s cohertio was not that of a military commander but rather the correction of
a loving parent.118
Burt argues that for Augustine “any punishment imposed on heretics or
schismatics had to be done out of love.”119 This was most evident in his letter to
Marcellinus in 411 as Marcellinus was in the process of ruling against the Donatists in
court. Augustine writes:
Fulfill, Christian judge, the duty of an affectionate father; let your indignation against their crimes be tempered by considerations of humanity; be not provoked by the atrocity of their sinful deeds to gratify the passion of revenge, but rather be moved by the wounds which these deeds have inflicted on their own souls to exercise a desire to heal them.120
Augustine, as noted, urged the Roman officials not to apply the death penalty against the
Donatists. In other cases, he successfully interceded for convicted Donatist leaders who
had been fined large sums of money for their crimes.
Finally, Augustine regarded coercion as a means to persuasion. Throughout his
writings, Augustine’s alludes to Jesus’ invitation to a wedding banquet recorded in Luke
116 Ad Catholicos fratres, 20.53; De vera religione, 16.31; Frend, The Donatist Church, p. 242; Lamirande, p. 18. 117 Epistula, 204.1; Retractactiones, 1.12.6; Lamirande, p. 63; Brown, “Saint Augustine's attitude to religious coercion,” 108. 118 Brown, “Saint Augustine's attitude to religious coercion,” 114. 119 Burt, p. 217. 120 Epistula, 133.2.
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14:15-24.121 That is, since the Donatists were unwilling to reason, they needed to be
lovingly compelled to enter the banquet (the church) where they would be convinced of
the truth. In Sermo 112, Augustine said as much: “He who is compelled is forced to go
where he does not wish to go, but when he has entered, he shares willingly in the
banquet.”122 Hence, for Augustine forcing the Donatists to unite with the church simply
put them in an environment where they could be persuaded.
V. Augustine and Other Religious Groups Before reaching a final conclusion about Augustine’s thoughts on persuading or coercing
heretics to join the church, let us briefly summarize the dealings he had with other non-
Christian or heretical groups during his time as a priest and bishop in Hippo. Aside from
the Donatists, Augustine interacted with pagans, Jews, Manicheans, Pelagians, Arians,
Priscillianists, and Marcionites. A comparison of his approach to these groups to his
manner of relating to the Donatists will certainly provide insight on his general thoughts
on persuasion and coercion.
(1) Pagans Roman paganism was concerned with the worship of traditional Roman deities, which in
turn secured protection for the state and allowed it to prosper. Prior to 313, paganism was
the official religion of the empire and Christians were routinely persecuted for refusing to
engage in pagan sacrifice. Ironically, beginning in 391, the Roman authorities began to
close the pagan temples and officially repress the traditional religion throughout the
empire.123 This of course incited the anger of the pagans, particularly against the
121 Epistulae, 93.2.5; 173.1; 185.6.24. 122 Sermo, 112.1-7 cited in Lamirande, p. 57. 123 O’Donnell, p. 13; Brown, “Saint Augustine's attitude to religious coercion,” 109.
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Christians. In 408, Augustine’s disciple Possidius was brutally beaten by a band of
pagans in his city of Calama.
How did Augustine respond to the beliefs and actions of the pagans? Though we
learn that Augustine, later in his life, seemed content that the pagan temples were being
closed by the Roman authorities, there is no indication that he sought to convert them
through coercion.124 In the case of Possidius, Augustine urged his colleague to visit the
court of the emperor in Ravenna and seek protection from the state against such violence.
When the Vandals sacked Rome in 408, there was also an angry reaction by the
pagans against the Christians as they believed that the Roman gods had abandoned Rome
because of the increase in Christian worship. It was this allegation that prompted
Augustine to sit down and write perhaps his greatest apologetic work, De civitate Dei
(The City of God).125 Augustine dedicated the first half of the work to showing the futility
of the pagan claim against the Christians.
In short, Burt asserts that his interaction with the pagans was polite, intellectual,
and persuasive.126 Gustave Combès adds that his approach toward the pagans was:
To convert by force of honesty, devotion, and tenderness, to seek occasions for making contact with their minds, to accumulate proofs which might convince them, to make appeal to sentiments which might move them, to lead those still hesitating to become Christians by appeal to their reason and their heart: such was the method of Saint Augustine with regard to the faithful of the ancient religion.127
124 Contra Gaudentium, 1.38.51; Lamirande, p. 30. 125 Lamirande, p. 30. 126 Burt, p. 219. 127 Gustave Combès, La doctrine politique de saint Augustin (Paris: Librairie Plon, 1927), p. 336 cited in Burt, 219.
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(2) Jews In general, Augustine seemed to have a respect for the Jews because of their prophets,
holy books, and some aspects of faith held in common with Christians.128 Despite the fact
that Augustine did not regard them as Christians and often pointed out the error of their
belief in sermons and in some of his writings, there is no indication that he wanted
Judaism suppressed in Africa.129 In fact, Augustine’s anti-Jewish writings and sermons
were never addressed directly to a Jewish audience. Rather, his goal was to explain to
Christians the difference in Jewish and Christian belief.130
(3) Manicheans A third heretical group that Augustine had significant interaction with was the
Manicheans. This relationship was particularly unique because Augustine had spent
nearly ten years as a member of this sect prior to his conversion to Christianity in 386.
Like the pagans, the Roman government had also officially suppressed the Manicheans
throughout the empire.131
Augustine spent a great deal of energy in the early years of his Christian
experience and ministry endeavoring to convert the Manicheans. Of his ten anti-
Manichean works, two were actually written before his ordination to the priesthood in
391 and three others were published prior to his consecration as bishop in 395. His last
apologetic work against the Manicheans appeared in 404. Like his approach to the
Donatists, Augustine enjoyed engaging the Manichean teachers in public debate and they
were much more willing to meet with Augustine in this forum than the Donatists.
128 Burt, pp. 221-224. 129 Lamirande, p. 35; Michael Signer, “Jews and Judaism,” ATTA, 470. 130 See Augustine’s Adversus Judeos and Epistula, 196; Michael Signer, “Adversus Judeos,” ATTA, 12-14. 131 Burt, p. 224.
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Augustine debated the Manichean leaders Fortunatus (392) and Felix (404) in well-
publicized debates in which he clearly defeated these opponents.132
Despite the fact that Augustine could have easily petitioned the state to suppress
the Manichean movement, he preferred to appeal to them in a friendly and intellectual
manner.133 Augustine, summarizing this approach, writes: “not by contention and strife,
and persecutions, but by kindly consolation, by friendly exhortation, by quiet
discussion.”134 Burt rightly asserts: “one might say that Augustine’s tolerant approach to
the Manicheans was always his preferred method of dealing with those of other
beliefs.”135
(4) Pelagians and Others Once the Donatists were officially condemned at the council of Carthage in 411,
Augustine began almost immediately to address the Pelagian heresy, which was affecting
the church in Africa and abroad. The movement was initiated by Pelagius, a British monk
who reacted to Augustine’s prayer in his Confessiones: “Command what you will . . .
give what you command” (et te facientem quod vis das mihi et dabis libenter sequi).136
While essentially denying man’s sinful nature, Pelagius defended man’s free will against
Augustine’s teaching on original sin and God’s sovereignty in drawing believers to faith.
Beginning in 411, Augustine spent the rest of his life dealing with the Pelagians.
Though the Roman state officially condemned the movement in 418,137 how did
Augustine seek to convert the Pelagians? The first way was through exposing the
132 Brown, “Saint Augustine's attitude to religious coercion,” 109; Perler, pp. 434-435, 448-449. 133 Burt, p. 225. 134 Contra epistulam Manichaei quam vocant Fundamenti, 1 cited in Lamirande, p. 36. 135 Burt, p. 227. 136 Confessiones, 10.35.56. 137 Eugene TeSelle, “Pelagius, Pelagianism,” ATTA, 637.
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faultiness of their teaching at church councils in Milevus in 416 and in Carthage in 416
and 418. Secondly, between 411 and 430, Augustine wrote sixteen books refuting
Pelagius’ teachings. Hence, Augustine sought to convert the Pelagians through reason
and persuasion. Though Augustine waged a ruthless battle with Pelagius, his pastoral
compassion for his theological adversary is quite evident in Epistula 146, which he wrote
to Pelagius around 411: “May the Lord recompense you with those blessings by the
possession of which you may be good for ever, and may live eternally with Him who is
eternal, my lord greatly beloved, and brother greatly longed for.”
Finally, similar to his interactions with the Pelagians, Augustine interacted with
the Arians, Priscillianists, and Marcionites on a lesser scale. Between 415 and 427, he
wrote two apologetic works against the Arians and one each against the Priscillianists,
and Marcionites.
VI. Conclusion As we have shown, Augustine invested a great deal of time and energy relating to non-
Christian and heretical groups during his time as a priest and bishop in the church of
Hippo. With the exception of his approval of traditional pagans being suppressed by the
Roman state, Augustine consistently appealed to the pagans, Jews, Manicheans,
Pelagians, Arians, Priscillianists, and Marcionites through reason and persuasion. While
seeking to convert them to Christianity or defend the church against their teachings,
Augustine interacted with them through letters, books, personal debates, and indirectly
through church councils. Hence, Burt’s assertion, previously cited, seems to summarize
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appropriately Augustine’s manner of dealing with other religions and heresies: a “tolerant
approach . . . was always his preferred method of dealing with those of other beliefs.”138
We have shown that Augustine did accept the state’s intervention uniquely in the
case of the Donatists.139 It has been argued that he did this because of their constant
refusal to meet and debate the issues; because they were a threat to the unity of the
church; and because they were in some cases violent. Through the influence of other
catholic bishops, Augustine also began to appreciate the practical effects of coercing the
Donatists into unity. Finally, his thoughts on coercion changed because he realized that
cohertio could also be a loving form of correction. Hence, Augustine allowed the Roman
state to intervene against the Donatists as a last resort following fruitless efforts to
convert them through persuasion.
Despite defending the role of Christian emperors carrying out the will of God
following Honorius’ edict of unity in 405, Augustine continued labored to persuade the
Donatists to abandon their erroneous teaching and practice. This is most evident in his
post-411 letters and books as well as his visit to Emeritus in Mauretania Caesarea in 418.
In fact, Augustine’s message to the Donatists through books, letters, and meetings
remained consistent in each of the three periods studied.
While quite open about his intention to convert other religious groups and
heresies to the Christian church, the evidence surveyed strongly suggests that Augustine’s
preferred approach was through persuasion. Hence, his attitude and concerns toward
groups that did not conform to orthodox Christianity were pastoral rather than political
138 Burt, p. 227. 139 Lamirande, p. 4.
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distinguishing him, for instance, from those who systematically oppressed heretics in
Europe during the medieval period.140
140 See Lamirande’s (Lamirande, pp. 70, 75) reaction to Reuter’s thesis (H. Reuter, Augustinische Studien, p. 70) that Augustine was responsible for the Inquisition.
36
Abbreviations:
ATTA= Allan Fitzgerald, ed., Augustine Through The Ages: An Encyclopedia (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1999)
Works Cited: Peter Brown, Augustine of Hippo: a Biography (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967, 2000). __________, “Saint Augustine's attitude to religious coercion,” Journal of Roman Studies 54 (1964). Donald Burt, Friendship and Society: An Introduction to Augustine’s Practical Philosophy (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1999). Gustave Combès, La doctrine politique de saint Augustin (Paris: Librairie Plon, 1927). François Decret, Le Christianisme en Afrique du Nord Ancienne (Paris: Seuil, 1996). W.H.C. Frend, The Donatist Church: A Movement of Protest in Roman Africa (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1952). ___________, The Rise of Christianity (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1984). Charles Hefele, Histoire des Conciles Vol. II (Paris: Letouzey et Ané, 1908). Alistair Kee, Constantine versus Christ (London: SCM Press, 1982). Emilien Lamirande, Church, State, and Toleration: An Intriguing Change of Mind in Augustine (Villanova: Villanova University Press, 1975). Serge Lancel, ed., Actes de la Conférence de Carthage en 411, 3 vol. (Paris: Éditions du Cerf, 1972, 1975). Robert Markus, “Donatus, Donatism,” ATTA, 284-287. Jane Merdinger, Rome and the African Church (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997). James J. O’Donnell, Augustine: A New Biography (New York: Harper Collins, 2005). Othmar Perler, Les Voyages de Saint Augustin, (Paris: Etudes Augustiniennes, 1969). H. Reuter, Augustinische Studien (Gotha: 1887).
37
Michael Signer, “Jews and Judaism,” ATTA, 470-474. ____________, “Adversus Judeos,” ATTA, 12-14. Eugene TeSelle, “Pelagius, Pelagianism,” ATTA, 633-640. Maureen Tilley, “Epistulam Parmeniani, Contra,”ATTA, 312. ____________, “Psalmus contra partem Donati,” ATTA, 688. ____________, “Baptismo, De,” ATTA, 91-92. ____________,“Litteras Petiliani, Contra,”ATTA, 504-505. ____________,“Catholicos fratres, Ad: or De unitate ecclesiae,”ATTA, 150-151. ____________,“Cresconium, Contra,” ATTA, 255-256. ____________,“Unico baptismo contra Petilianum, De,’ ATTA, 858-859. ____________,“Donatistis post conlationem, Contra,” ATTA, 281. ____________,“Gaudentium, Contra,” ATTA, 375-376. ____________,“Sermo ad Caesariensis ecclesiae plebem,” ATTA, 770-771. ____________,“Gesta cum Emerito,” ATTA, 381-382.